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Paris Travel Guide: Best Hotels, Restaurants & Experiences

Palace hotels, boutique townhouses, grand suites, rooftop terraces, spa retreats, and river views.

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Hotels (14)
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$$$$ · 3 Michelin Keys· Forbes Five-Star· Relais & Châteaux · Verified

Paris's sole château-hotel occupies a neoclassical mansion within 5,000 m² of private gardens, redesigned by Laura Gonzalez with Art Deco furnishings, Japanese wallpapers, and Chinese antiques across 50 individually styled rooms. Chef Grégory Garimbay's Bellefeuille earned one Michelin star for seasonal French gastronomy featuring organic vegetables from the owners' estate. The historic library bar retains leather-bound volumes and spiral staircase from its Fondation Thiers days, while the two-floor Guerlain spa centers on a 15-meter pool beneath Greco-Roman bas-reliefs.

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$$$$ · 3 Michelin Keys· Forbes Five-Star · Verified

Le Bristol Paris layers 18th-century opulence—Gobelin tapestries, Louvre-loaned artwork, antique furnishings—with serious culinary ambition: three-Michelin-starred Épicure under Arnaud Faye, plus in-house chocolate ateliers, a pasta workshop, and cheese cellar. The 1,200-square-meter garden, Paris's largest palace courtyard, blooms with magnolia and orange trees, while a sixth-floor pool styled as a 1920s yacht frames rooftop views toward the Eiffel Tower and Sacré-Cœur.

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$$$$ · 3 Michelin Keys· Forbes Five-Star · Verified

Occupying France's oldest palace since 1835, Le Meurice pairs Versailles-inspired grandeur with Philippe Starck's modernist touch across 160 rooms and suites. Alain Ducasse oversees the two-Michelin-starred restaurant, while John Lobb-trained butlers deliver complimentary shoe shines and bespoke programming for children and pets. Paris's sole Valmont spa anchors the wellness offering with three treatment rooms, hammams, and Turkish baths. The Belle Étoile penthouse crowns the property with a wraparound terrace surveying the city's rooftops.

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$$$$ · 3 Michelin Keys· Forbes Five-Star · Verified

Since the Belle Époque, this Avenue Montaigne landmark has drawn everyone from Grace Kelly to Josephine Baker with its theatrical blend of Louis XVI interiors and Art Deco swagger. Jean Imbert au Plaza Athénée serves reimagined French classics beneath a ceiling adorned with 20,000 gold leaves, while the Dior Institut spa delivers Europe's first light therapy room. Many rooms frame the Eiffel Tower, and a century-old ivy-courtyard completes the scene.

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$$$$ · 2 Michelin Keys· Forbes Five-Star · Verified

This 1758 neo-classical palace overlooks Place de la Concorde, its historic reception rooms retaining pink marble floors and gold-trimmed wrought iron beneath painted ceilings. Karl Lagerfeld designed the signature suites; L'Ecrin delivers two-Michelin-starred cuisine; Les Ambassadeurs serves champagne under the arcaded terrace. The subterranean spa centres on a striking infinity pool clad in 17,600 golden scales, while the cellars hold 40,000 bottles including rare early-twentieth-century vintages.

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$$$$ · 1 Michelin Key· Forbes Five-Star · Verified

Prince Roland Bonaparte's former palace, now a registered Historical Monument, delivers sweeping Eiffel Tower views from beds, bathtubs, and private balconies across half its rooms. The city's longest hotel pool anchors the luxurious Chi spa, while Shang Palace holds France's sole Michelin star for Chinese cuisine, serving what many consider Paris's finest dim sum. The flagship suite commands a 100-square-meter terrace overlooking the Seine and Iron Lady.

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$$$$ · 1 Michelin Key· Small Luxury Hotels · Verified

This 1920s Golden Triangle maison pairs Haussmannian grandeur with Art Deco flourishes—carmine, petrol, and celadon palettes flow through fifty high-ceilinged rooms, some catching Eiffel Tower sightlines. Café 52 runs truffle macaroni and poke bowls from breakfast through dinner, Christophe Michalak pastries included. Below, the privatizable Spa Thala arrays XXL jacuzzi, hammam, and Dermalogica treatments. Families appreciate interconnecting doubles and complimentary bulldog plushies for children.

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$$$$ · Forbes Five-Star · Verified

Pierre-Yves Rochon restored this 1928 Avenue George V landmark to Art Deco grandeur, layering Macassar ebony, Saint Laurent marble, and Tamara de Lempicka originals throughout its eight floors. Chef Akira Back's minimalist Japanese restaurant anchors the culinary program alongside Bar 19.20's speakeasy aesthetic and 52-cognac collection, while the mosaic-tiled Wellness Suite hammam and verdant patio courtyard deliver intimate respite. The 180 m² Duplex Suite crowns the property with Eiffel Tower vistas from its Avenue George V terrace.

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Sarah Lavoine, a sought-after designer who calls this arrondissement home, brought her signature palette of chocolate, navy, and black to Le Roch's 37 rooms, layering Carrera marble, walnut floors, and sculptural mirrors into a mood far richer than the city's usual minimalism. A slate-lined pool glows by candlelight below ground, while the cocktail bar draws neighborhood regulars to its terrace and courtyard garden. The Saint Roch suite adds a private hammam and wine cellar.

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Housed in a Haussmannian building on Boulevard Haussmann near Parc Monceau and the 8th arrondissement's art galleries, Bowmann offers 53 rooms across a more intimate scale than the capital's sprawling palace properties. Suites at the upper tiers include Eiffel Tower sightlines, with the flagship spanning 200 square meters and a terrace jacuzzi. Lacure Officine runs the spa and indoor pool, while 99 Hausmann serves guests on a garden terrace.

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$$$$ · 1 Michelin Key · Verified

An 1850 establishment reimagined as 59 intimate rooms of contemporary simplicity, warmed by rich textures and art including Guy de Rougemont sculptures and Marco Del Re's ceiling fresco. The Michelin-starred Baudelaire delivers inventive cuisine under chef Anthony Denon, while Spa Le Burgundy by Susanne Kaufmann features a 15m pool, hammam, and Sothys treatments. Le Charles cocktail bar honors Baudelaire with exceptional cognacs and champagne service in the winter garden.

12. Cheval Blanc Paris

$$$$ · 3 Michelin Keys· Forbes Five-Star

LVMH's flagship Parisian hotel occupies the reimagined art deco Samaritaine building overlooking the Seine, with just 72 rooms appointed in hand-selected marbles, leathers, and parchments. Arnaud Donckele's three-Michelin-starred Plénitude anchors a quartet of restaurants, while the seventh-floor terrace commands sweeping rooftop panoramas. The 100-foot mosaic-lined infinity pool—among France's longest—and Dior Spa complete an urban retreat designed for families and cosmopolitan luxury seekers alike.

13. Four Seasons George V

$$$$ · 3 Michelin Keys· Forbes Five-Star

This 1928 palace hotel fuses Art Deco architecture with Louis XV interiors by Pierre-Yves Rochon, anchoring the Golden Triangle near the Champs-Elysées. Three Michelin-starred restaurants—Le Cinq by Christian Le Squer, Le George, and L'Orangerie—share billing with a wine cave housing 50,000 rare vintages. Jeff Leatham's extravagant floral installations fill the lobby, while the lavish spa includes a nine-meter pool. The Penthouse suite's terrace frames Eiffel Tower views.

14. Ritz Paris

$$$$ · 3 Michelin Keys· Forbes Five-Star

César Ritz and Auguste Escoffier opened this Place Vendôme palace in 1898; Coco Chanel lived here for 34 years, Hemingway left relics at the bar bearing his name, and Proust held court in the salon. A 16-meter pool glimmers beneath Ancient Rome frescoes and 600,000 mosaic tiles, while Eugénie Béziat's Michelin-starred Espadon sits under a retractable glass roof. The 1,560 m² spa names treatment cabins after former residents' flowers—Colette's Iris, Ingrid Bergman's Rose—each beneath hand-painted porcelain petals.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which Paris neighborhoods offer the best hotel options?

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The 1st and 8th arrondissements concentrate heritage properties near Place Vendôme and the Champs-Élysées. The Marais (3rd and 4th) favors boutique hotels in historic townhouses. Saint-Germain-des-Prés (6th) attracts guests seeking literary associations and Left Bank discretion, while the 7th near the Musée d'Orsay offers quieter residential streets with easy museum access.

When is the best time to visit Paris for a city break?

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Late April through June brings mild weather and extended daylight for walking the quais. September and October offer similar conditions with fewer crowds and the return of cultural programming after summer closures. January and February see the lowest hotel rates, though some restaurants close for annual holidays. Fashion weeks (late February, late September) create pressure on central accommodation.

How does Paris dining culture differ from other European capitals?

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Meal times remain later than in London or Amsterdam — lunch rarely begins before 12:30, dinner service starts at 19:30. The apéritif hour holds real social significance, particularly at wine bars in the 10th and 11th. Reservations matter more here; walk-ins work at bistros but rarely at serious tables. Tipping is included in prices by law, though rounding up remains customary for good service.

Nearby Destinations

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The Right Bank delivers two distinct experiences: the monumental grandeur of Place Vendôme and Avenue Montaigne, where heritage palaces line Haussmann boulevards, and the creative energy of the Marais and Canal Saint-Martin, where design hotels occupy converted workshops and private mansions. The Left Bank trades spectacle for discretion — Saint-Germain-des-Prés and the 7th arrondissement hide some of the city's most refined addresses behind unremarkable façades, their interiors speaking to guests who prefer substance over statement.

Beyond accommodation, the city's dining scene rewards serious exploration. Bistros in the 11th serve natural wines alongside contemporary French cooking, while the triangle d'or maintains its constellation of multi-starred tables. The restaurant scene reflects a broader shift: chefs trained in palace kitchens now open small-format dining rooms in overlooked neighborhoods, bringing technical precision to casual settings. Whether you seek a historic hotel with literary provenance or a concrete-and-glass newcomer, the range here remains unmatched in Europe.